Lowrange2
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Abbeville, SC
Yeah but your house looks nice. Mine looks like Charlie's house from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
I still believe Andy likes to see him self talk on here.. just to post the number of posts!
If he could get away with posting one word per post .. HE WOULD!
Yeah but your house looks nice. Mine looks like Charlie's house from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
That's true. :woohoo:
Hey, I didn't say anything! I just answered a question!!!![]()
Go rake the damn leaves!
you'd be surprised. I hauled a dozen sheets of 3/4 ply and a big stack of 2x4s with mine. It wasn't happy but could have handled more.Congrats!
Yup! and If I was doing all that to it I'd be extending it out over the deck too. For some reason I don't think an MJ could handle that load. lol
We get SOME snow. Last year we got about 4 inches one time. It's usually not enough to stick to the ground.
We've painted it like 12 times. No paint will stick to it and there big chunks of it flaking off. It's just old masonite crap.
you'd be surprised. I hauled a dozen sheets of 3/4 ply and a big stack of 2x4s with mine. It wasn't happy but could have handled more.
you're lucky. I would pay to have that instead of the cement asbestos crap I have, at least then I could burn it. And not pay megabucks for disposal.
.. in the dark ... because it gets dark at like 4pm around here now.
chemistry says asbestos doesn't burn. No ifs, ands, or buts.Fire ain't hot enough.
I went through 10 gallons of gasoline in an hour on Saturday night :flame::cheers:put some diesel in the fire!
I went through 10 gallons of gasoline in an hour on Saturday night :flame::cheers:
We had a pretty good bonfire going. I started it with a 5 foot pile of brush and old boards and lumber, with 4 gallons of gas poured over it. Had to light leaves on the end of a branch and use them to start it, and then turn and run like hell before it caught. The fireball was about 24 feet in diameter and 30 feet tall, figuring based on the scorch marks on the ground the next morning.
At 3.xx a gallon, that's an expensive bonfire!